Mercury Retrograde: Smitten by the Mitten!

17 Oct

body_sweater_flip_cropEver since last Friday the 13th when I posted the Mercury Retrograde Body Mitten, I’ve been gratified and horrified by the high degree of interest shown in this cocoon-like garment. Are we that scared of the world? Clearly, I touched a nerve. Do we all need shrinks? Or just a body mitten?

First, thanks to Tem Tarriktar, publisher of The Mountain Astrologer magazine, who offered to re-post on TMA’s Facebook page. Given the impetus provided by TMA’s 38k fans, within a few days my post received 100k views.

The following Thursday, author Elizabeth Gilbert (Eat, Pray, Love) posted it on her Facebook page. By the following weekend, the post had enjoyed about 180k views. This confirmed for me that Mercurophobia extends well beyond the astrological community. Zealous psychotherapists, take note.

Now, since most writers hate writing and will use any distraction to avoid facing their demons, I’ve wasted hours reading comments from my website and various Facebook pages. Here, a few comments of my own:

To the Virgo spinster who applied for a job knitting the body mitten, even though she said it looked like an uncircumcised penis, I must say no. You’re obviously not as celibate as you pretend, therefore not qualified to knit the inviolate matrix of squirrel wool and unicorn hair that repels retrograde Mercury’s bad vibes.

To the new mother, a Cancer, who read that post and laughed so hard she peed, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean for that to happen. Newer versions of the body mitten will incorporate an absorbent bottom liner similar to what you’d find in a bird cage.

To the Aquarian who wondered if we’ll be marketing international designs, they’re in the works. For example, the Burqa-Mitten will soon be on shelves everywhere in the Muslim world, insh’allah.

To the Leo who complained it’s too hot to wear the body mitten during Retrograde Mercury periods in equatorial climes, our designers are now fashioning a model made of breathable hemp. If you don’t like it, you can smoke it, and then who cares about Mercury Retrograde?

To the Capricorn who worried that our body mittens have no fire or emergency exit, our designers are now working on a quick-release lanyard made of high-tensile monkey hair. One quick tug, your mitten will unravel, and you’ll be free to run and hide elsewhere.

To the Aries gal who complained that the body mitten won’t help get her laid during Mercury Retrograde, I say, why is it always about you? The head portal of the mitten is already perfectly positioned for giving, um, pleasure to someone else.

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(The ME-Rsex shown here features spreadable legs and a deep throat chakra. The model inside is holding a TV remote but we all know what that represents.)

To the many Taurus folks concerned about animal rights, no squirrels or unicorns were harmed during the harvesting of their wool and hair. Our mitten farms are inspected regularly by officers of the SPCA (Society for the Protection of Cottage-industry Animals).

To the lovely Libran who worried that her hair and makeup would be disturbed inside the body mitten, please rest assured, sweetheart, everyone looks absolutely fabulous inside our mittens!

To the Pisces lady who asked whether our unicorns are pure-blooded, dimidian or quartarian, because she only wanted the pure one, I guarantee they’re 100% imaginary, and completely unadulterated by reality.

To the Sagittarian who enquired about a body mitten for camping, our designers have been working on one called the Clarissa that replaces squirrel wool with wolf fur. Unfortunately, during field trials, the women campers have all run away with wolves, taking their body mittens with them.

To the Gemini who suggested the body mitten could be marketed for coach airplane travel, we’re already in discussion with Virgin Airlines. Sir Richard, author of the book Screw it, Let’s Do it, has agreed to donate his share of profits to a foundation for the preservation of unicorns.

Lastly, to the many consumers who’ve written to warn us that cheap knockoffs are now appearing on the streets of London, New York and Los Angeles, I must advise, beware of fakes made by nympho Scorpios using cat fur and skank hair. Check the manufacturer’s label, which should read:

© SEXTILE: It’s all in bad taste, but it’s what we do best.

PS: If anyone knows any celibate Virgos who can knit, please contact me, because our production line is now 5000 units behind order. I know you’re out there. Agents are standing by, and your desperate calls will be discreetly handled.

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Seriously, folks (although I know it’s hard to take me seriously), these garments do exist in the real world. AnOtherMag has described them as having “the dual benefit of keeping you cozy while looking crazy enough to keep anyone from disturbing you.” Available from Andrea Crews eShop Agency of Paris with world-wide outlets, where they’re known as the BodySuit, or full-body sweater.

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© Sextile: It’s all in bad taste, but it’s what we do best.

Alan Varanasi @ 50%

Alan Annand is an astrologer and writer of crime fiction, including his New Age Noir series featuring astrologer and palmist Axel Crowe, a criminal profiler with a horoscope.

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I used to play poker…

13 Oct

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 eCard by Alan Annand, writer and astrologer

 

Chuck Wendig: “Finish what you write.”

13 Oct
Wendig

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The easiest way to separate yourself from the unformed blobby mass of “aspiring” writers is to (a) actually write and (b) actually finish. That’s how easy it is to clamber up the ladder to the second echelon. Write. And finish what you write. That’s how you break away from the pack and leave the rest of the sickly herd for the hungry wolves of shame and self-doubt. And for all I know, actual wolves.

~ CHUCK WENDIG (novelist, screenwriter, and game designer @ terribleminds.com) 

Marina Lewycka (b. October 12): “Comedy can expose the soul” & other quotes on writing

12 Oct
Lewycka

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Marina Lewycka, born 12 October 1946, is a British novelist of Ukrainian origin. Her debut novel A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian was long-listed for the 2005 Man Booker Prize and short-listed for the 2005 Orange Prize for Fiction.

Six quotes on writing:

  1. One of the nice things about being a writer is that no one recognizes you. 
  2. I’m a huge fan of Chaucer, he has the most wonderful characters, and I drew on him a lot for Two Caravans.
  3. My preferred place to write is in bed propped up with lots of cushions, and a nice pot of tea on a tray – but it can be hard on the back.
  4. I like to learn something as I write. I often start out with a subject I don’t know very much about and finding out more makes the process more interesting. 
  5. You think comedy isn’t serious, but with comedy you can say such a lot that serious can’t. Comedy can expose the depths of the soul; funny is what we are when we least intend to be.
  6. You must have a good story and find the right voice to tell it. Another useful tip is show, don’t tell. In other words, don’t write that a character behaved badly, show us their bad behavior instead.

Side effects of Tequila®…

11 Oct

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 eCard by Alan Annand, writer and astrologer

 

The world’s most interesting astrologer: afflicted planets

11 Oct

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Alan Annand is an astrologer and writer of crime fiction, including his New Age Noir series featuring astrologer and palmist Axel Crowe, a criminal profiler with a horoscope.

Read reviews for Scorpio Rising (#1), buy it or Felonious Monk (#2) at:

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Alan Varanasi @ 50%

 

Arthur C. Clarke: Prophet of the Digital Age

11 Oct
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Guest post by Brandon Engel:

Touted as one of science fiction’s “Big Three” alongside Robert A. Heinlein and Isaac Asimov, writer Arthur C. Clarke is warmly remembered, not merely for his prose, but his many contributions to universal knowledge across several different disciplines.

Geosynchronous Satellite Networks

In 1945, Clarke published an essay entitled Extra-Terrestrial Relays: Can Rocket Stations Give World-Wide Radio Coverage? which proposed a geosynchronous satellite communication network. Clarke’s time as a radar technician with the Royal Air Force likely contributed to this. The article also anticipated the creation of the International Space Station (ISS), with Clarke writing: “Using material ferried up by rockets, it would be possible to construct a ‘space-station’ in such an orbit. The station could be provided with living quarters, laboratories and everything needed for the comfort of its crew, who would be relieved and provisioned by a regular rocket service. This project might be undertaken for purely scientific reasons as it would contribute enormously to our knowledge of astronomy, physics and meteorology.” It’s all the more astounding because this article was written 12 years before the launch of Sputnik.

The Internet and Personal Computers

In 1974, Clarke gave a memorable interview with the Australian Broadcasting Company. The interview was conducted in a room with a gigantic, primitive computer.  The interviewer asked Clarke what the world would be like for adults living in the year 2001. Without skipping a beat, Clarke then detailed his vision of both the web and personal computers. Clarke predicted that by 2001, people would have “not a computer as big as this” (in reference to the gargantuan apparatus filling the space around him) “but at least a console through which he can talk to his friendly local computer, and get all of the information he needs for his everyday life.” Clarke then went on to list bank statements and theater reservations as two examples of the information we might retrieve electronically in the future.

Clarke was not the only one of his contemporaries to predict the internet. Asimov, for example, had also made predictions about the internet as early as 1964. What distinguishes Clarke the most in this arena was his contribution to the conceptual development of wireless communications, which ultimately yielded everything from  transcontinental television broadcasts to high speed internet.

2001Skype and iPad

As a science fiction writer, Clarke will probably be best remembered by the general public for the script he penned for Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (and the novelization of the screenplay that was written concurrent to the movie). It’s one of the greatest films of all time, and it really set the benchmark for every science fiction epic that followed it. Something that makes the film particularly novel for contemporary audiences are the video conferencing consoles used. While the technology looks laughably dated today, what Clarke envisioned was, essentially, Skype. Also notable are the use of what are ostensibly iPads.

What’s the lesson that modern consumers should take from all of this? To figure out what Apple is going to release in the next five years, read something that Clarke wrote 50 years ago.

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Brandon Engel is a multimedia artist/blogger/cinephile/oddity collector based in Chicago, whose principal interests include vintage horror films, dated video games, and speculative fiction. Follow him on Twitter: @BrandonEngel2.

The cliché of Mercury retrograde thinking

11 Oct
schoolteacher

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As an author I try to be mindful of clichés and avoid them like the plague. Clichés include phrases like: think outside the horoscope, kill two Geminis with one stone, take the Taurus by the horns, etc. We’ve seen these word-groups so many times they’ve become stock communications devices, comfortable crutches we can lean on when we’re too lazy to walk.

The challenge that every serious writer takes up, however, is to express something in words that no one’s yet composed in this particular combination. The very word novelist implies a responsibility to say something new, or at least say an old thing in a novel way.

As an astrologer, I’m dismayed at how often our profession advises deferring life in the face of Mercury retrograde. Three times a year this old bogeyman in a wheelchair gets rolled out for everyone to contemplate with a collective sense of dread, lethargy and resignation.

mercurygod

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Sadly, repeated warnings of Mercury retrograde from the astrological community have become a kind of boy-who-cried-wolf running gag that now turns up on mainstream media. Sorry, but we do our profession no service by continuing to spout this questionable folk wisdom. We might as well shout: Beware Friday the 13th! Don’t walk under that ladder in front of that black cat! Don’t step on that crack, you’ll break your mother’s back!

Mercury retrograde has become the modern astrologer’s cliché. So deeply entrenched is this in our culture that some national astrological associations routinely offer for sale wallet-sized cards indicating Mercury retrograde periods. God forbid we should forget to discourage a client with the dubious prediction that these murky periods – three times a year, for three weeks at a pop – lurk like ponds of quicksand to swallow their emails, their travel plans or their job interviews.

Meanwhile, serious analysis of this phenomenon reveals no bias whatsoever for mishap or disaster during Mercury retrograde periods – neither natural disasters, aviation crashes, maritime sinkings, train wrecks nor acts of terrorism. If there really was a discernible southbound drift of stock prices during Mercury retrograde, don’t you think we’d all be counting our money on the terrace of our Caribbean hideaway instead of selling umbrellas to clients for the next planetary shit-storm?

Mercury retrograde: it’s a problem all right, but one that we’ve created in our own minds. We lend it more credence than it deserves, and it’s time we stop passing this fallacy on to our clients.

But if you think this is unduly harsh, just remember, Every cloud has a Mercury lining.

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Alan Varanasi @ 50%Alan Annand is an astrologer and writer of crime fiction, including his New Age Noir series featuring astrologer and palmist Axel Crowe, a criminal profiler whom one reviewer called “Sherlock Holmes with a horoscope.”

Find his books at Amazon, AppleBarnes&NobleKoboSmashwords

Astrologer: http://www.navamsa.com. Writer: http://www.sextile.com.

 

Tequila® isn’t for everyone.

10 Oct

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 eCard by Alan Annand, writer and astrologer

 

Harold Pinter (b. October 10): “Language is a trampoline” & other quotes on writing

10 Oct
pinter

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Harold Pinter (10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008) was a Nobel Prize-winning English playwright, screenwriter, director and actor. His best-known plays include The Birthday PartyThe Homecoming, and Betrayal, each of which he adapted for the screen. His screenplay adaptations of others’ works include The French Lieutenant’s Woman and The Trial

Six quotes on writing:

  1. Good writing excites me, and makes life worth living.
  2. One way of looking at speech is to say that it is a constant stratagem to cover nakedness.
  3. I don’t give a damn what other people think. It’s entirely their own business. I’m not writing for other people.
  4. Language in art remains a highly ambiguous transaction, a quicksand, a trampoline, a frozen pool which might give way under you … at any time.
  5. I’m not committed as a writer, in the usual sense of the term, either religiously or politically. And I’m not conscious of any particular social function. I write because I want to write. I don’t see any placards on myself, and I don’t carry any banners.
  6. I think we communicate only too well, in our silence, in what is unsaid, and that what takes place is a continual evasion, desperate rearguard attempts to keep ourselves to ourselves. Communication is too alarming. To enter into someone else’s life is too frightening. To disclose to others the poverty within us is too fearsome a possibility.